Filing fees, sheriff costs, attorney fees, and lost rent — under C.R.S. § 38-12 (Tenants and Landlords)
The true cost of evicting a tenant in Colorado is far higher than most landlords expect, and understanding the full price tag — court filing fees, process-server fees, sheriff lockout costs, attorney fees, and weeks or months of lost rent — is the first step toward making rational decisions about when to evict, when to negotiate cash-for-keys, and when to escalate to a contested trial. Under C.R.S. § 38-12 (Tenants and Landlords), a clean uncontested eviction in Colorado resolves in roughly 21–45 days from the day the initial notice is served; a contested case in which the tenant files an answer and raises defenses (habitability, retaliation, discrimination, improper service, partial payment) can stretch to 60–120 days or more, with every additional day costing the landlord another day of unpaid rent.
The three cost categories every Colorado landlord needs to budget for are: hard court costs — the Colorado eviction filing fee ($105–$200), process-server or sheriff service, sheriff or constable lockout fee ($50–$200), writ of possession issuance, and any subpoena or records-request costs; legal representation — a Colorado eviction attorney typically charges $750–$3500 for an unlawful detainer or forcible-entry-and-detainer case, with flat-fee and hourly arrangements both common; and lost rent, which is almost always the single largest line item on the ledger, often three to five times the out-of-pocket legal costs combined. On top of those three direct costs, landlords should budget for turnover — cleaning, painting, re-keying locks, trash removal, minor repairs, re-advertising, showings, screening new applicants, and a vacancy period before the next lease starts.
This Colorado eviction cost guide walks through every line item a rental-property owner should expect to pay, cites the governing statute for each fee, shows a realistic total-cost estimate for both uncontested and contested scenarios, and explains the specific decision points — pro se vs. attorney, small-claims vs. eviction court, cash-for-keys vs. litigation — that drive the final number. All figures reflect typical ranges across Colorado counties; actual filing fees, sheriff fees, and attorney rates vary from county to county and from firm to firm, so always confirm with your local Colorado county court and a licensed Colorado landlord-tenant attorney before relying on these numbers.
| Cost Line | Uncontested | Contested |
|---|---|---|
| Notice prep & service | $75–$200 | $150–$350 |
| Court filing fee | $105–$200 (C.R.S. § 38-12 (Tenants and Landlords)) | |
| Process server | $75–$200 | |
| Attorney fees | — | $750–$3,500 |
| Sheriff / constable lockout | $50–$200 | |
| Lost rent during process | $1,045–$2,240 (21–45 days @ $1,493/mo) | $2,986–$5,972 (60–120 days) |
| Cleaning, repairs, re-leasing | $800–$2,200 | $1,100–$5,200 |
| Total scenario | $1,500–$4,140 | $4,391–$13,372 |
Colorado-specific eviction cost dynamics. Expect a Colorado eviction to run 21–45 days uncontested and 60–120 days contested — every day of the process is another day of unpaid rent accruing on the ledger, which is why the lost-rent line item on a Colorado eviction typically dwarfs the sum of filing fees ($105–$200), sheriff lockout fees ($50–$200), process-server fees, and attorney fees combined. Lost rent is the number one cost driver in every Colorado eviction, and speed (prompt notice, prompt filing, prompt service, prompt judgment, prompt writ execution) is the single most valuable skill a Colorado landlord or property-management company can bring to the table. Because Colorado requires just cause for non-renewal of a residential tenancy, landlords commonly retain counsel even on routine non-payment cases — the just-cause theory must survive judicial scrutiny, and a defective notice-to-quit or improperly pleaded just-cause basis is the #1 reason Colorado evictions get dismissed and have to be refiled. Budget toward the higher end of the $750–$3500 Colorado eviction-attorney range, and expect most Colorado landlord-tenant firms to charge a flat fee for an uncontested matter plus hourly rates for contested trial work, depositions, and post-judgment enforcement.
Small-claims court vs. eviction court in Colorado. A Colorado landlord pursuing only a money judgment for past-due rent, property damage, or unpaid utilities may file in Colorado small-claims (or justice, magistrate, or civil) court up to the jurisdictional cap — this is cheaper, faster, and does not require an attorney. But possession — the legal right to change the locks and force the tenant out — is only available through the formal Colorado landlord-tenant eviction track (unlawful detainer / forcible entry and detainer / summary ejectment, depending on Colorado nomenclature). Small-claims court in Colorado cannot issue a writ of possession, cannot order a sheriff lockout, and cannot restore the landlord to physical possession of the rental unit. Most experienced Colorado landlords file a combined eviction + money-damages complaint in the eviction court to get both outcomes in one case, one filing fee, and one hearing.
Tenant-paid fees, late fees, and attorney-fee recovery in Colorado. Colorado law requires every tenant-paid fee — late fee, NSF/returned-check fee, application fee, holdover fee, pet fee, utility overage — to be disclosed in the written lease and to be reasonable in amount. Colorado courts routinely strike charges that are not clearly authorized in writing, that exceed the statutory cap (where applicable), or that operate as a penalty rather than a liquidated-damages estimate. Attorney-fee recovery in a Colorado eviction generally turns on whether the lease contains a prevailing-party attorney-fee clause; without one, each side bears its own fees unless the Colorado landlord-tenant statute specifically authorizes fees in the action. When the lease does include a prevailing-party clause, Colorado courts treat it as reciprocal — the prevailing party (landlord or tenant) is entitled to reasonable fees, which is why poorly screened evictions can end up costing the losing landlord more in tenant-side attorney fees than the unpaid rent being pursued.
Cash-for-keys economics in Colorado. A cash-for-keys settlement — in which the Colorado landlord pays the tenant $500–$3,000 in exchange for a signed vacate-and-release agreement and prompt surrender of the unit — is almost always cheaper than a contested Colorado eviction. Compare the total out-of-pocket cost ($750–$3500 in attorney fees + filing fees + service fees + sheriff lockout + 60–120 days of lost rent at the Colorado market rate) against a single cash-for-keys payment, and the negotiated exit usually wins on a pure-dollars basis. Document every cash-for-keys deal in a written vacate-and-release that includes: date certain for surrender, condition of the unit on surrender, mutual release of all claims, waiver of the security-deposit return, and payment only on surrender (never in advance). Consult a licensed Colorado landlord-tenant attorney before tendering payment.
Every dollar spent on tenant screening saves roughly $15–$25 in eviction and turnover costs. A rigorous screening protocol — verified income, rent-to-income ratio, prior landlord references, and a documented rubric — is the single highest-ROI move a Colorado landlord can make.
See our tenant screening guide for Colorado for the 5-point protocol used by NextGen Properties.
An uncontested Colorado eviction typically runs about $105–$200 in filing fees plus $50–$200 for sheriff lockout, plus 21–45 days of lost rent. A contested case with an attorney adds $750–$3500 in legal fees and can extend past 120 days.
The landlord pays the filing fee at the time of filing. If the landlord prevails, the judgment may include filing fees and costs against the tenant, but collection is rarely successful.
Attorney-fee recovery in Colorado generally depends on a prevailing-party clause in the written lease. Without one, each side bears its own fees unless the statute specifically provides for fees in the action.
Cash-for-keys is commonly used in Colorado. Offering the tenant $500–$2,500 to vacate voluntarily — documented in a written vacate-and-release agreement — typically saves 60–120 days of lost rent and the full litigation cost. Consult a Colorado attorney before offering.
Most landlord-insurance policies do not cover lost rent from eviction. Loss-of-rents endorsements exist but typically exclude intentional non-payment. A rent-guarantee product or larger security deposit is a better economic hedge than filing coverage.
Sources: C.R.S. § 38-12 (Tenants and Landlords); U.S. Census Bureau ACS 2023 (median gross rent); published court fee schedules. Last reviewed April 17, 2026. Informational only — not legal advice. Consult a licensed Colorado attorney.